The Language Level symbol shows a users proficiency in the languages theyre interested in. Setting your Language Level helps other users provide you with answers that arent too complex or too simple.
By sending a gift to someone, they will be more likely to answer your questions again!
If you post a question after sending a gift to someone, your question will be displayed in a special section on that person’s feed.
By sending a gift to someone, they will be more likely to answer your questions again!
The Language Level symbol shows a users proficiency in the languages theyre interested in. Setting your Language Level helps other users provide you with answers that arent too complex or too simple.
If you post a question after sending a gift to someone, your question will be displayed in a special section on that person’s feed.
Disclaimer: While we are aware that in many places 1 ½ ounces is considered the “standard” pour of liquor rather than two ounces, our editorial stance is that these places are objectively wrong and just being cheap.
As you can imagine, it depends, both on the size of the glass and the finger. In a completely unscientific sampling of three people with various sized hands, a finger-width of alcohol was poured into three different rocks glasses. Each pour came surprisingly close to two ounces, with only a range of variation around ¼ ounce between each finger and glass.
You may have heard someone say the phrase, “a finger of whiskey.” The idea is that a pour of liquor to the height of a finger held horizontally alongside the bottom of glass should roughly equal two ounces.
This two-ounce pour also applies to most single-spirit drinks ordered “on the rocks” (with ice) or “up” (stirred with ice to chill and dilute, then strained). Though it seems bigger in the glass, the alcohol remains the same. It’s the ice and water that inflate the volume of the drink.
We don’t know the science behind why this trick works (if you do, please email and fill us in), but in tests with every glass we could find, along with years of anecdotal experience in actual bars and restaurants, measurements almost always came out perfect. When we figure out the reason, we’ll let you know.
English Tutor Nick P Verb Phrase (298) Pour in – Four Meanings
FAQ
What does pouring a 4 mean?
What does poured up mean in slang?
What does pouring one out mean?
Just a quick refresher for the uninitiated: pouring one out refers to “the act of pouring liquid (usually an alcoholic beverage) on the ground as a sign of reverence for friends or relatives that have passed away. In most cases, a 40 ounce bottle (see: forty) of liquor is used.” That’s Urban Dictionary’s definition.
What does poured mean?
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. POURED definition: 1. past simple and past participle of pour 2. to make a substance flow from a container, especially….
What does get the pour a 4 mug mean?
Get the pour a four mug. A sentence to describe pouring four drinks for four other people in the hope of having an orgy with said people. Liam: hey man what ya drinking? Get the pour for four mug.
What does pour a 4 ounce sprite mean?
a slang phrase used to describe to pour 4 ounces of promethazine cough syrup in usually 2 liter sprite/fanta to make lean/sizzurp/purp/oil/ dirty sprite usually paired with some hard candy Get the pour a four mug. A sentence to describe pouring four drinks for four other people in the hope of having an orgy with said people.